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19THCENTURY
ARCHITECTURE
The Architecture of the Victorian Age
Outline


 Socio-Economic Background
 Technological Advancements

 Battles of Architecture in the Industrial

  Revolution
The Neo-Classical
The Neo Gothic

   Other Styles
   Applications of New Technology
   The Next Step
An Age of Uncertainty
By the opening of the 19th C the confidence apparent in the
  architecture of the age of elegance in the preceding century
  had evaporated.


The agitation brought about by the French Revolution of 1789
  had never fully subsided, and a different kind of society
  began to take place.


There was another revolution every bit as influential as the
  French, the Industrial Revolution which was cradled in
  Britain, from roughly 1750-1850 although it was not seen as
  a revolution but only new ways of making things.
A time of rapid change in UK and in Europe

        The Industrial Revolution
    Began in England, (1750-1920)

Time of major changes in
  Agriculture
  Manufacturing
  Mining
  Transport
  Technology

These had a profound effect on the
   socio-economic and cultural
   conditions, starting in the United
   Kingdom, then subsequently
   spreading throughout Europe, North
   America, and eventually the world.

It marked a major turning point in
    human history, almost every aspect
    of daily life was eventually
    influenced in some way.
                                         The Stockton and Darlington Railway
The Industrial Revolution


  Inventions
It began with textiles.

   Finance
   Trading opportunities

   A change in the way goods were produced from
    human labor to machine.

   The three basics were present- coal (energy),
    iron and other metals, population of workers.
Factors for the Progress of the Industrial
                      Revolution

   Development and growth of new socio- economic classes:
    working class, bourgeoisie, wealthy industrial class.

Population change
The urban population dramatically increased, towns and cities
  multiplied in number and size, a new urban society emerged.
  The demand for new buildings was greater that ever before.

  Brought a flood of new building materials
Iron was mined efficiently.
The formula for concrete was rediscovered 1756 by John
   Smeaton.

   To the fashionable architects the central problem was to
    discover a style appropriate to this time of change.
The Invention of Machines

   The invention of
    machines to do
    the work of hand
    tools                               The Spinning Jenny
                                        invented by James
                                        Hargreaves
   The use of
    steam, and later
    of other kinds of
    power, in place of
    the muscles of
    human beings                   The 1698 Savery
    and of animals                 Engine – the world's first
                                   commercially useful
                                   steam engine built
                                   by Thomas Savery
The adoption of the factory system.
New Materials

   After the Baroque slowly faded away, the 18th century
    architecture considered primarily of revivals of
    previous periods.

   Building materials were made out of only a few
    manmade materials along with those available in
    nature: timber, stone, lime.

   Mortar and concrete
   Iron
   Brick
   Glass
   Portland Cement – strong, durable, fire resistant type
    of cement developed in 1824.
But in the 1800’s, there was a great amount of production
    in Iron. These made architects and engineers design
   buildings made out of iron. There are 3 types of iron:
                  cast, wrought, and steel.
Characteristics, 19th C Architecture


   Curtain walls were used
   Steel skeletons were covered with
    masonry
   Large skylights were popular
   Lacked in imagination and style
   Main focus was functionality
Glass Making



A new method of
producing glass,
known as the
cylinder process,
was developed in
Europe during the
early 19th century.
In 1832, this process
was used by
the Chance
Brothers to create
sheet glass. They
became the leading
producers of
window and plate           TheCrystal Palace held the Great Exhibition of
glass.                                         1851
Iron making
In the Iron
industry, coke was
finally applied to all
stages of iron smelting,
replacing charcoal. This
had been achieved
much earlier
for lead and copper as
well as for
producing pig iron in
a blast furnace, but the
second stage in the
production of bar
iron depended on the
use of potting and            Nasmyth’s steam hammer of 1840 at work in 1871
stamping.
The Architecture of the Industrial Age

    Architecture and the art turned into the past. Architects searched
    for their own style but they searched for it in the previous styles
    returning to the style of Bramante, Palladio and Michelangelo .


   Neo-Classical
   Neo-Gothic
   Renaissance
   Baroque
   Romantic
   Chinese
   Saracenic

But Neo-Classical and Neo-Gothic were the main
  contenders in the Battle of the Styles of the 19th C.
The Architects of the Victorian Period

The Neo-Classicists
 Karl Friedrich Schinkel     (1781-1841)
 Sir John Sloane             (1753-1837)
 Benjamin Henry Latrobe      (1766-1820)
 Thomas Jefferson            (1743-1826)

The Gothic Revival
 Augustus Welby Northmore Pugin (1812-1852)

 Richard Upjohn                (1802-78)
 Eugene Emmanuel Viollet-le-Duc (1814-1879)
The Neo-Classicists
Karl Friedrich Schinkel, Schauspielhaus, Berlin, 1818-21.

The entire structure is raised on a high base and is dominated by
an Ionic portico with receding planes to either side articulated by
plain pilasters and precise, shallow mouldings that appear to
have been stretched tightly over an internal skeleton.
John Soane (1753-1837), Bank of England, London

The leading exponent of Neo-Classicism in England at this time
was Sir John Soane, an idiosyncratic architect whose work also
has Romantic qualities.
Benjamin Henry Latrobe, Roman Catholic Cathedral,
Baltimore, 1805-18.
Latrobe presented both Gothic and Neo-Classical designs of this
church to his client. The classical proposal was selected but did
not include the towers.
Thomas Jefferson, Monticello, Charlottesville, Virginia, 1770.

For his own house Jefferson turned the familiar Palladian five-part
organization backward in order to focus the complex on spectacular
mountain views. This view from the front shows that Jefferson
disguised the two-storey elevation to appear as only one story.
The William Brown Library and Museum (now the World Museum
Liverpool), designed by Thomas Allom (1804-1872), UK
The Neo-Gothic
Gothic Revival (also called “Neo-Gothic”)



   Neo-Gothic buildings have many of these features:

- Strong vertical lines and a sense of great height
- Pointed windows with decorative tracery
- Gargoyles and other carvings
- Pinnacles




•   The first Gothic Revival homes
-   Stone and Bricks
-   American Version: Lumber and Factory Made Trims
The Trinity
Church in New
York, USA
Charles Barry and A.W.N. Pugin, Houses of
              Parliament, London, 1836-51.


The
government
had decided
that the new
building
should be in
the style
thought to
represent
England at its
best –
Elizabethan or
Jacobean,
which occured
during Late
Gothic.
House of Parliament,
London, 1836-1867
Richard Upjohn (1802-78), Trinity Church, New
York City, 1839-46.


Upjohn’s first
major commission
was for Trinity
Church in New
York City, which
was designed for a
growing and
wealthy
congregation. The
Trinity Church has
been dwarfed by
skyscrapers, which
once included the
now destroyed
World Trade
Center. However,
in 1846 the church
was a prominent
landmark.
Eugène Viollet-le-Duc


French architect and theorist




Famous for interpretive
  “restorations” of
 medieval buildings
Gothic Revival Architect
                                 Notre Dame de Paris
Eugene Emmanuel Viollet-le-Duc


The leading proponent of the
Gothic Revival in France was
Eugene Emmanuel Viollet-le-
Duc (1814-1879), an architect
who shared Pugin’s
enthusiasm for medieval
works.

He saw the system of the rib
vault, pointed arch, and flying
buttress as analogous to 19th C
iron framing, and he aspired to
a modern architecture based
on engineering
accomplishments that would
have the integrity of form and
detail found in medieval works.
Tower Bridge, London
Horace Jones and John Wolfe Barry, 1840
All Saints
Sir Charles Barry
Stand,
Manchester, 1860
A Merry Mix of Styles
Neo-Renaissance, Italian Renaissance,
French Renaissance, Neo-Romanesque
offered the architect and client other
choices.
Richard Morris Hunt, Biltmore, Asheville, North
  Carolina, 1890-95.


The first
American to
attend the Ecole
des Beaux-Arts
was Richard
Morris Hunt
(1827-95) who
entered the
school in 1846.
Newly rich
industrial
magnates
wanted houses
that imitated the
ancestral
mansions of
European
nobility, and of
all American
architects Hunt
was best able to
provide the
designs desired.
Richard Morris Hunt, The Breakers, Newport,
   Rhode Island, 1892-95.


Richard Morris
Hunt was the
first American
to attend the
Ecole des
Beaux-Arts in
Paris. The
knowledge he
gained there of
academic
planning and
monumental
design made
him the
architect of
choice among
the late 19th C
American elite.
Interiors, The Breakers, Newport,
     Rhode Island, 1892-95.
McKim, Mead and White, Villard Houses
New York City, 1882-85.
The firm of McKim, Mead and White established the model for
the large-scale American architectural practice. They based this
residential structure on Roman palazzi such as the Palazzo
Farnese.
The New West End Synagogue
by George Audsley (1838-
1925)
in St Petersburgh Place,
London was in the Neo-
Romanesque.
Westminster Cathedral

by John Francis Bentley London, Neo-Romanesque.
Italian Renaissance, Sir Charles Barry

                               London Reform Club
Travelers’ Club 1829-1832           1837- 1841
Italian Renaissance
  Gottfried Semper



               Semper Oper, Dresden, Germany
                           1838-1841
Neo-Renaissance




Art Gallery of the Zwinger
         1847-1854
  Gottfried Semper
Grand Opera, Paris, 1860-1874
Jean Louis Charles Garnier
Paris Opera House




Externally as well as internally the stylistic elements derive from the Italian
   Cinquecento and from the France of Louis XIII and Louis XIV, from
   Renaissance and from Baroque.
Polychromy is widely used to heighten the impact yet further. The façade is
   massive and heavily decorated and gilded, and really monumental.
Grand Opera, Paris, 1860-1874




          The great stair hall is perhaps Garnier’s greatest triumph.
There is a tension in every form. The flights of the stairs fly easily and with
 perfect fluency through the stair hall. With its related corridors and foyers
  the stair provides the best of all possible ceremonial approaches to the
                                   auditorium.
Palais de Justice (Law Courts),
            Details
       Brussels, 1866-1883
     Joseph Poelaert
Palais de Justice (Law Courts), Brussels, 1866-1883
                Joseph Poelaert
Palais de Justice (Law Courts),
            Interiors
       Brussels, 1866-1883
Neo-Renaissance




Schwerin Castle, Hungary, 1851 Friedrich
   August Stüler (1800-1865)
Neo-Renaissance
National Museum of Fine Arts, Stockholm,
              1846-1866
      Friedrich August Stüler
National Museum of Fine Arts,
    Stockholm, 1846-1866
          Interiors
 Friedrich August Stüler
Romanesque
Crane Library, Quincy, Massachusetts , 1880
Henry Hobson Richardson
Romanesque
 Crane Library, Quincy, Massachusetts , 1880
Henry Hobson Richardson (1838-86)
St. Pancras Parish Church, London, 1819-21
               Greek Revival
The White City
World’s Columbian Exposition, Chicago,
            Illinois, 1893
Richard Morris Hunt, Administration Building, World’s
Columbian Exposition, Chicago, Illinois, 1893.
Hunt’s Administration Building stands at the head of the Court of
Honor and its lagoon. The “White City” captivated the American
public. Using widespread exterior electric lighting for the first time, it
started a movement that produced proposals for new civic cores in
cities nationwide.
The White City, Chicago’s World Fair
held in Chicago in 1893 to celebrate
the 400th anniversary of Christopher
Columbus arrival in the New World in
1492




    The       City      Beautiful
    Movement was a reform
    movement         in     North
    American architecture and
    urban       planning     that
    flourished in the 1890s and
    1900s with the intent of
    using    beautification  and
    monumental grandeur in
    cities.
     Advocates of the movement
    believed        that     such
    beautification     could thus
    promote a harmonious social
    order that would increase
    the quality of life.
Daniel Burnham, Architect and Urban Planner


                     City planning projects :



                     Cleveland

                     San Francisco

                     Washington DC

                     Manila

                     Baguio

                     Designed the Chicago’s World Fair.

                     Proponent of the ‘City Beautiful’ movement.

                     Burnham only stayed for six weeks in the
                     Philippines. He later hired the services of
                     William Parsons, a New York architect who
                     stayed in the country for eight years.
IRON AND STEEL STRUCTURES of the 19th
             CENTURY
Architectural Applications of Iron and Steel
                      Construction

   Iron and steel were not admired for their architectural
    qualities in the 19th C: prevailing Neo-Classical and
    Romantic attitudes looked to past ages buildings had
    always been of load-bearing masonry construction.


   Everything that architects and their clients admired and felt
    comfortable with could be constructed by using traditional
    materials and methods.


   Architects were slow to exploit the possibilities of iron and
    steel, which were first used in industrial utilitarian
    buildings, such as textile mills, warehouses, and
    greenhouses.
Progress in iron fabrication
   18th C industrial production of cast and
    wrought iron so increased its availability that
    iron replaced wood in the frame of any building
    where heavy loads or the danger of fire was of
    concern.
   Cast iron was favoured for columns, while the
    superior tensile qualities of wrought iron made
    it the recommended material for beams.
   In the 19th C iron began to be used instead of
    wood in the fabrication of truss bridges built for
    roads and railroads that crossed rivers or
    valleys.
Iron

  Linear two-dimensional fragile-looking material
  Elegant linearity is its most rational form

Solid, Block-like, Closed type Building      Greenhouses
                                           Covered Markets
                                                  Halls
                                          Exhibition Pavilions
                                                Passages
     Open, Linear, Articulated frame        Utility Buildings
Decimus Burton and Richard Turner
   Palm House, Kew Gardens, London, 1845-47.


Iron was most
elegantly
employed in
landscape
gardening.
Victorian
England,
prosperous
from the wealth
of its empire,
had a
fascination with
the tropical
plants that were
brought back
from India,
Africa, and the
Far East.
19th Century: Applications of Iron Steel
PALM HOUSE, Royal Botanical Garden, Kew, London, 1845-1848

                     Wrought Iron
Applications of Iron Steel
PALM HOUSE, Royal Botanical Garden, Kew, London, 1845-1848
Joseph Paxton, Crystal Palace, 1851.


Joseph Paxton
designed a
building with
prefabricated
parts that
could be
mass-
produced and
erected
rapidly. It
stood in stark
contrast to
traditional,
massive stone
construction.
Joseph Paxton, Crystal Palace, 1851.


Once the
exhibition
opened, the
building was
visited by about
one-quarter of
the population
of England and
was universally
acclaimed for
its vast, airy
interior space.
Journalists
dubbed it the
Crystal Palace,
a name it had
retained.
19th Century: Applications of Iron Steel
CRYSTAL PALACE – Hyde Park, London, 1850-1851




                                      Joseph Paxton
Henri Labrouste, Bibliotheque Ste.
Genevieve, Paris, 1842-50.
Henri Labrouste (1801-1875) made a fine architectural use of cast iron in the
Bibliotheque Ste.-Genevieve in Paris. On the exterior the building presents a
correct Neo-Classical facade recalling Italian Renaissance palace and church
designs; but on the interior at the 2nd floor level one finds for that time an
unprecedentedly great reading room which extends the width and length of the
building, covered by light semicircular cast iron arches.
Henri Labrouste, Bibliotheque Ste.
   Genevieve, Paris, 1842-50
Henri Labrouste, Bibliotheque Ste.
   Genevieve, Paris, 1842-50
THE CRYSTAL PALACE
19th Century: Applications of Iron Steel
     Bibliotheque Sainte-Genevieve
19th Century: Applications of Iron Steel
     Bibliotheque Sainte-Genevieve
19th Century: Applications of Iron Steel
  Bibliotheque Nacionale 1857-1867
19th Century: Applications of Iron Steel
  Bibliotheque Nacionale 1857-1867
19th Century: Applications of Iron
                               Steel




Gustave Eiffel
 1823-1932
19th Century: Applications of Iron Steel
  EIFFEL TOWER, PARIS, 1884-1887




                                           320 metres
                                             (1,050 ft) tall

                                           First real example
                                              of frame
                                              building
                                              technique

                                           Remains the
                                             largest iron
                                             construction in
                                             the world
19th Century: Applications of Iron Steel
  EIFFEL TOWER, PARIS, 1884-1887
19th Century: Applications of Iron Steel
                       STATUE OF LIBERTY




Stands 151-ft (46m)

One of the earliest
  examples of curtain
  wall construction in which
  the exterior of the
  structure is not load
  bearing, but is instead
  supported by an
  interior framework.

He included two
  interior spiral
  staircases, to make it
  easier for visitors to
  reach the observation
  point in the crown.
Gustave Eiffel, Eiffel Tower, Paris, 1889.


The most famous French designer
using iron in the second half of
the 19th C was Gustav Eiffel
(1832-1923). This engineer
gained fame for his graceful
bridge designs and then used his
experience with iron construction
to build the world’s tallest tower,
the 1010 ft high Eiffel Tower,
erected for the Paris International
Exposition of 1889. Not until the
completion of the Chrysler
Building in New York was Eiffel’s
tower exceeded in height, and it
remains the largest iron
construction in the world, for steel
was rapidly becoming the
preferred material for metal
framing.
Gustave Eiffel, Auguste Bartholdi and Richard Morris
     Hunt, Statue of Liberty, New York City, 1883-86.



In New York harbor stands
another of Eiffel’s engineering
projects, the internal skeleton
for the 151 ft Statue of Liberty
(1883-86). Miss Liberty’s
copper skin is supported by
iron straps attached to a steel
framework that Eiffel designed
to withstand the considerable
wind loads of the harbour. At
the time of its construction, the
Statue of Liberty had the most
advanced diagonally braced
frame to be found in any
structure in the U.S.
   420mL & 115m
    W
   Destroyed    in
    1910



      Charles Dutert
        1845-1906


                        19th Century: Applications of Iron Steel
                       GALERIE DES MACHINES, 1887-1889
J.A. And W.A. Roebling, Brooklyn Bridge, New
York City, 1869-83.
In seeking to expand the market for iron and improve the desirable
qualities of the material, 19th c ironmongers experimented with new
methods for manufacturing steel, which is an alloy of low-carbon iron
and trace amounts of other metals. The Brooklyn Bridge used steel
cables.
The Early Skyscrapers


 William Le Baron Jenney
 (1832-1907), the
 designer of the Home
 Insurance Building
 (1884-85), is generally
 credited with the early
 development of the
 skyscraper although the
 Home Life Insurance
 Building is not entirely
 metal-framed as the
 first floor contains
 sections of masonry
 bearing wall.
The Early Skyscrapers




Daniel Burnham and John Welborn      Daniel Burnham and John Welborn
Root, Monadnock Building, Chicago,   Root, Reliance Building, Chicago, 1894-
1890-91                              95.
The Arts and Crafts Movement

Two issues – social values
and the artistic quality of
manufactured products –
were at the heart of the
Arts and Crafts
Movement, which
flourished from about
1850-1900 in Britain and
in the U.S. Originating in
Victorian England,its ideas
spread to Europe. John
Ruskin (1819-1900), a
prolific critic of art and
society, may be regarded
as the originator of the
Arts and Crafts ideals. In
Ruskin’s view, the
Industrial Revolution was
a grievous error exerting
a corrupting influence on
society.

Right: Philip Webb, Red
House, Bexleyheath, Kent,
1859-60.
FIN

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(History of Architecture 2) Nov 2012 19th century architecture

  • 2. Outline  Socio-Economic Background  Technological Advancements  Battles of Architecture in the Industrial Revolution The Neo-Classical The Neo Gothic  Other Styles  Applications of New Technology  The Next Step
  • 3. An Age of Uncertainty By the opening of the 19th C the confidence apparent in the architecture of the age of elegance in the preceding century had evaporated. The agitation brought about by the French Revolution of 1789 had never fully subsided, and a different kind of society began to take place. There was another revolution every bit as influential as the French, the Industrial Revolution which was cradled in Britain, from roughly 1750-1850 although it was not seen as a revolution but only new ways of making things.
  • 4. A time of rapid change in UK and in Europe The Industrial Revolution Began in England, (1750-1920) Time of major changes in  Agriculture  Manufacturing  Mining  Transport  Technology These had a profound effect on the socio-economic and cultural conditions, starting in the United Kingdom, then subsequently spreading throughout Europe, North America, and eventually the world. It marked a major turning point in human history, almost every aspect of daily life was eventually influenced in some way. The Stockton and Darlington Railway
  • 5. The Industrial Revolution  Inventions It began with textiles.  Finance  Trading opportunities  A change in the way goods were produced from human labor to machine.  The three basics were present- coal (energy), iron and other metals, population of workers.
  • 6. Factors for the Progress of the Industrial Revolution  Development and growth of new socio- economic classes: working class, bourgeoisie, wealthy industrial class. Population change The urban population dramatically increased, towns and cities multiplied in number and size, a new urban society emerged. The demand for new buildings was greater that ever before.  Brought a flood of new building materials Iron was mined efficiently. The formula for concrete was rediscovered 1756 by John Smeaton.  To the fashionable architects the central problem was to discover a style appropriate to this time of change.
  • 7. The Invention of Machines  The invention of machines to do the work of hand tools The Spinning Jenny invented by James Hargreaves  The use of steam, and later of other kinds of power, in place of the muscles of human beings The 1698 Savery and of animals Engine – the world's first commercially useful steam engine built by Thomas Savery
  • 8. The adoption of the factory system.
  • 9.
  • 10. New Materials  After the Baroque slowly faded away, the 18th century architecture considered primarily of revivals of previous periods.  Building materials were made out of only a few manmade materials along with those available in nature: timber, stone, lime.  Mortar and concrete  Iron  Brick  Glass  Portland Cement – strong, durable, fire resistant type of cement developed in 1824.
  • 11. But in the 1800’s, there was a great amount of production in Iron. These made architects and engineers design buildings made out of iron. There are 3 types of iron: cast, wrought, and steel.
  • 12. Characteristics, 19th C Architecture  Curtain walls were used  Steel skeletons were covered with masonry  Large skylights were popular  Lacked in imagination and style  Main focus was functionality
  • 13. Glass Making A new method of producing glass, known as the cylinder process, was developed in Europe during the early 19th century. In 1832, this process was used by the Chance Brothers to create sheet glass. They became the leading producers of window and plate TheCrystal Palace held the Great Exhibition of glass. 1851
  • 14. Iron making In the Iron industry, coke was finally applied to all stages of iron smelting, replacing charcoal. This had been achieved much earlier for lead and copper as well as for producing pig iron in a blast furnace, but the second stage in the production of bar iron depended on the use of potting and Nasmyth’s steam hammer of 1840 at work in 1871 stamping.
  • 15. The Architecture of the Industrial Age Architecture and the art turned into the past. Architects searched for their own style but they searched for it in the previous styles returning to the style of Bramante, Palladio and Michelangelo .  Neo-Classical  Neo-Gothic  Renaissance  Baroque  Romantic  Chinese  Saracenic But Neo-Classical and Neo-Gothic were the main contenders in the Battle of the Styles of the 19th C.
  • 16. The Architects of the Victorian Period The Neo-Classicists  Karl Friedrich Schinkel (1781-1841)  Sir John Sloane (1753-1837)  Benjamin Henry Latrobe (1766-1820)  Thomas Jefferson (1743-1826) The Gothic Revival  Augustus Welby Northmore Pugin (1812-1852)  Richard Upjohn (1802-78)  Eugene Emmanuel Viollet-le-Duc (1814-1879)
  • 18. Karl Friedrich Schinkel, Schauspielhaus, Berlin, 1818-21. The entire structure is raised on a high base and is dominated by an Ionic portico with receding planes to either side articulated by plain pilasters and precise, shallow mouldings that appear to have been stretched tightly over an internal skeleton.
  • 19. John Soane (1753-1837), Bank of England, London The leading exponent of Neo-Classicism in England at this time was Sir John Soane, an idiosyncratic architect whose work also has Romantic qualities.
  • 20. Benjamin Henry Latrobe, Roman Catholic Cathedral, Baltimore, 1805-18. Latrobe presented both Gothic and Neo-Classical designs of this church to his client. The classical proposal was selected but did not include the towers.
  • 21. Thomas Jefferson, Monticello, Charlottesville, Virginia, 1770. For his own house Jefferson turned the familiar Palladian five-part organization backward in order to focus the complex on spectacular mountain views. This view from the front shows that Jefferson disguised the two-storey elevation to appear as only one story.
  • 22. The William Brown Library and Museum (now the World Museum Liverpool), designed by Thomas Allom (1804-1872), UK
  • 24. Gothic Revival (also called “Neo-Gothic”)  Neo-Gothic buildings have many of these features: - Strong vertical lines and a sense of great height - Pointed windows with decorative tracery - Gargoyles and other carvings - Pinnacles • The first Gothic Revival homes - Stone and Bricks - American Version: Lumber and Factory Made Trims
  • 25. The Trinity Church in New York, USA
  • 26. Charles Barry and A.W.N. Pugin, Houses of Parliament, London, 1836-51. The government had decided that the new building should be in the style thought to represent England at its best – Elizabethan or Jacobean, which occured during Late Gothic.
  • 28. Richard Upjohn (1802-78), Trinity Church, New York City, 1839-46. Upjohn’s first major commission was for Trinity Church in New York City, which was designed for a growing and wealthy congregation. The Trinity Church has been dwarfed by skyscrapers, which once included the now destroyed World Trade Center. However, in 1846 the church was a prominent landmark.
  • 29. Eugène Viollet-le-Duc French architect and theorist Famous for interpretive “restorations” of medieval buildings Gothic Revival Architect Notre Dame de Paris
  • 30. Eugene Emmanuel Viollet-le-Duc The leading proponent of the Gothic Revival in France was Eugene Emmanuel Viollet-le- Duc (1814-1879), an architect who shared Pugin’s enthusiasm for medieval works. He saw the system of the rib vault, pointed arch, and flying buttress as analogous to 19th C iron framing, and he aspired to a modern architecture based on engineering accomplishments that would have the integrity of form and detail found in medieval works.
  • 31. Tower Bridge, London Horace Jones and John Wolfe Barry, 1840
  • 32. All Saints Sir Charles Barry Stand, Manchester, 1860
  • 33. A Merry Mix of Styles Neo-Renaissance, Italian Renaissance, French Renaissance, Neo-Romanesque offered the architect and client other choices.
  • 34. Richard Morris Hunt, Biltmore, Asheville, North Carolina, 1890-95. The first American to attend the Ecole des Beaux-Arts was Richard Morris Hunt (1827-95) who entered the school in 1846. Newly rich industrial magnates wanted houses that imitated the ancestral mansions of European nobility, and of all American architects Hunt was best able to provide the designs desired.
  • 35. Richard Morris Hunt, The Breakers, Newport, Rhode Island, 1892-95. Richard Morris Hunt was the first American to attend the Ecole des Beaux-Arts in Paris. The knowledge he gained there of academic planning and monumental design made him the architect of choice among the late 19th C American elite.
  • 36. Interiors, The Breakers, Newport, Rhode Island, 1892-95.
  • 37. McKim, Mead and White, Villard Houses New York City, 1882-85. The firm of McKim, Mead and White established the model for the large-scale American architectural practice. They based this residential structure on Roman palazzi such as the Palazzo Farnese.
  • 38. The New West End Synagogue by George Audsley (1838- 1925) in St Petersburgh Place, London was in the Neo- Romanesque.
  • 39. Westminster Cathedral by John Francis Bentley London, Neo-Romanesque.
  • 40. Italian Renaissance, Sir Charles Barry London Reform Club Travelers’ Club 1829-1832 1837- 1841
  • 41. Italian Renaissance Gottfried Semper Semper Oper, Dresden, Germany 1838-1841
  • 42. Neo-Renaissance Art Gallery of the Zwinger 1847-1854 Gottfried Semper
  • 43. Grand Opera, Paris, 1860-1874 Jean Louis Charles Garnier
  • 44. Paris Opera House Externally as well as internally the stylistic elements derive from the Italian Cinquecento and from the France of Louis XIII and Louis XIV, from Renaissance and from Baroque. Polychromy is widely used to heighten the impact yet further. The façade is massive and heavily decorated and gilded, and really monumental.
  • 45. Grand Opera, Paris, 1860-1874 The great stair hall is perhaps Garnier’s greatest triumph. There is a tension in every form. The flights of the stairs fly easily and with perfect fluency through the stair hall. With its related corridors and foyers the stair provides the best of all possible ceremonial approaches to the auditorium.
  • 46.
  • 47.
  • 48. Palais de Justice (Law Courts), Details Brussels, 1866-1883 Joseph Poelaert
  • 49. Palais de Justice (Law Courts), Brussels, 1866-1883 Joseph Poelaert
  • 50. Palais de Justice (Law Courts), Interiors Brussels, 1866-1883
  • 51. Neo-Renaissance Schwerin Castle, Hungary, 1851 Friedrich August Stüler (1800-1865)
  • 52. Neo-Renaissance National Museum of Fine Arts, Stockholm, 1846-1866 Friedrich August Stüler
  • 53. National Museum of Fine Arts, Stockholm, 1846-1866 Interiors Friedrich August Stüler
  • 54. Romanesque Crane Library, Quincy, Massachusetts , 1880 Henry Hobson Richardson
  • 55. Romanesque Crane Library, Quincy, Massachusetts , 1880 Henry Hobson Richardson (1838-86)
  • 56. St. Pancras Parish Church, London, 1819-21 Greek Revival
  • 57. The White City World’s Columbian Exposition, Chicago, Illinois, 1893
  • 58. Richard Morris Hunt, Administration Building, World’s Columbian Exposition, Chicago, Illinois, 1893. Hunt’s Administration Building stands at the head of the Court of Honor and its lagoon. The “White City” captivated the American public. Using widespread exterior electric lighting for the first time, it started a movement that produced proposals for new civic cores in cities nationwide.
  • 59. The White City, Chicago’s World Fair held in Chicago in 1893 to celebrate the 400th anniversary of Christopher Columbus arrival in the New World in 1492 The City Beautiful Movement was a reform movement in North American architecture and urban planning that flourished in the 1890s and 1900s with the intent of using beautification and monumental grandeur in cities. Advocates of the movement believed that such beautification could thus promote a harmonious social order that would increase the quality of life.
  • 60. Daniel Burnham, Architect and Urban Planner City planning projects : Cleveland San Francisco Washington DC Manila Baguio Designed the Chicago’s World Fair. Proponent of the ‘City Beautiful’ movement. Burnham only stayed for six weeks in the Philippines. He later hired the services of William Parsons, a New York architect who stayed in the country for eight years.
  • 61. IRON AND STEEL STRUCTURES of the 19th CENTURY
  • 62. Architectural Applications of Iron and Steel Construction  Iron and steel were not admired for their architectural qualities in the 19th C: prevailing Neo-Classical and Romantic attitudes looked to past ages buildings had always been of load-bearing masonry construction.  Everything that architects and their clients admired and felt comfortable with could be constructed by using traditional materials and methods.  Architects were slow to exploit the possibilities of iron and steel, which were first used in industrial utilitarian buildings, such as textile mills, warehouses, and greenhouses.
  • 63. Progress in iron fabrication  18th C industrial production of cast and wrought iron so increased its availability that iron replaced wood in the frame of any building where heavy loads or the danger of fire was of concern.  Cast iron was favoured for columns, while the superior tensile qualities of wrought iron made it the recommended material for beams.  In the 19th C iron began to be used instead of wood in the fabrication of truss bridges built for roads and railroads that crossed rivers or valleys.
  • 64. Iron  Linear two-dimensional fragile-looking material  Elegant linearity is its most rational form Solid, Block-like, Closed type Building Greenhouses Covered Markets Halls Exhibition Pavilions Passages Open, Linear, Articulated frame Utility Buildings
  • 65. Decimus Burton and Richard Turner Palm House, Kew Gardens, London, 1845-47. Iron was most elegantly employed in landscape gardening. Victorian England, prosperous from the wealth of its empire, had a fascination with the tropical plants that were brought back from India, Africa, and the Far East.
  • 66. 19th Century: Applications of Iron Steel PALM HOUSE, Royal Botanical Garden, Kew, London, 1845-1848 Wrought Iron
  • 67. Applications of Iron Steel PALM HOUSE, Royal Botanical Garden, Kew, London, 1845-1848
  • 68. Joseph Paxton, Crystal Palace, 1851. Joseph Paxton designed a building with prefabricated parts that could be mass- produced and erected rapidly. It stood in stark contrast to traditional, massive stone construction.
  • 69. Joseph Paxton, Crystal Palace, 1851. Once the exhibition opened, the building was visited by about one-quarter of the population of England and was universally acclaimed for its vast, airy interior space. Journalists dubbed it the Crystal Palace, a name it had retained.
  • 70. 19th Century: Applications of Iron Steel CRYSTAL PALACE – Hyde Park, London, 1850-1851 Joseph Paxton
  • 71. Henri Labrouste, Bibliotheque Ste. Genevieve, Paris, 1842-50. Henri Labrouste (1801-1875) made a fine architectural use of cast iron in the Bibliotheque Ste.-Genevieve in Paris. On the exterior the building presents a correct Neo-Classical facade recalling Italian Renaissance palace and church designs; but on the interior at the 2nd floor level one finds for that time an unprecedentedly great reading room which extends the width and length of the building, covered by light semicircular cast iron arches.
  • 72. Henri Labrouste, Bibliotheque Ste. Genevieve, Paris, 1842-50
  • 73. Henri Labrouste, Bibliotheque Ste. Genevieve, Paris, 1842-50
  • 75. 19th Century: Applications of Iron Steel Bibliotheque Sainte-Genevieve
  • 76. 19th Century: Applications of Iron Steel Bibliotheque Sainte-Genevieve
  • 77. 19th Century: Applications of Iron Steel Bibliotheque Nacionale 1857-1867
  • 78. 19th Century: Applications of Iron Steel Bibliotheque Nacionale 1857-1867
  • 79. 19th Century: Applications of Iron Steel Gustave Eiffel 1823-1932
  • 80. 19th Century: Applications of Iron Steel EIFFEL TOWER, PARIS, 1884-1887 320 metres (1,050 ft) tall First real example of frame building technique Remains the largest iron construction in the world
  • 81. 19th Century: Applications of Iron Steel EIFFEL TOWER, PARIS, 1884-1887
  • 82. 19th Century: Applications of Iron Steel STATUE OF LIBERTY Stands 151-ft (46m) One of the earliest examples of curtain wall construction in which the exterior of the structure is not load bearing, but is instead supported by an interior framework. He included two interior spiral staircases, to make it easier for visitors to reach the observation point in the crown.
  • 83. Gustave Eiffel, Eiffel Tower, Paris, 1889. The most famous French designer using iron in the second half of the 19th C was Gustav Eiffel (1832-1923). This engineer gained fame for his graceful bridge designs and then used his experience with iron construction to build the world’s tallest tower, the 1010 ft high Eiffel Tower, erected for the Paris International Exposition of 1889. Not until the completion of the Chrysler Building in New York was Eiffel’s tower exceeded in height, and it remains the largest iron construction in the world, for steel was rapidly becoming the preferred material for metal framing.
  • 84. Gustave Eiffel, Auguste Bartholdi and Richard Morris Hunt, Statue of Liberty, New York City, 1883-86. In New York harbor stands another of Eiffel’s engineering projects, the internal skeleton for the 151 ft Statue of Liberty (1883-86). Miss Liberty’s copper skin is supported by iron straps attached to a steel framework that Eiffel designed to withstand the considerable wind loads of the harbour. At the time of its construction, the Statue of Liberty had the most advanced diagonally braced frame to be found in any structure in the U.S.
  • 85. 420mL & 115m W  Destroyed in 1910 Charles Dutert 1845-1906 19th Century: Applications of Iron Steel GALERIE DES MACHINES, 1887-1889
  • 86.
  • 87. J.A. And W.A. Roebling, Brooklyn Bridge, New York City, 1869-83. In seeking to expand the market for iron and improve the desirable qualities of the material, 19th c ironmongers experimented with new methods for manufacturing steel, which is an alloy of low-carbon iron and trace amounts of other metals. The Brooklyn Bridge used steel cables.
  • 88. The Early Skyscrapers William Le Baron Jenney (1832-1907), the designer of the Home Insurance Building (1884-85), is generally credited with the early development of the skyscraper although the Home Life Insurance Building is not entirely metal-framed as the first floor contains sections of masonry bearing wall.
  • 89. The Early Skyscrapers Daniel Burnham and John Welborn Daniel Burnham and John Welborn Root, Monadnock Building, Chicago, Root, Reliance Building, Chicago, 1894- 1890-91 95.
  • 90. The Arts and Crafts Movement Two issues – social values and the artistic quality of manufactured products – were at the heart of the Arts and Crafts Movement, which flourished from about 1850-1900 in Britain and in the U.S. Originating in Victorian England,its ideas spread to Europe. John Ruskin (1819-1900), a prolific critic of art and society, may be regarded as the originator of the Arts and Crafts ideals. In Ruskin’s view, the Industrial Revolution was a grievous error exerting a corrupting influence on society. Right: Philip Webb, Red House, Bexleyheath, Kent, 1859-60.
  • 91. FIN